Saturday, November 21, 2009

Tired and Trashed

November 20, 2009. Anyone know what's significant? You guessed it. New Moon just came out! And I was one of the mentally incompetent people who went and saw it at midnight on Thursday!

My overall review is this: IT WAS MUCH BETTER THAN TWILIGHT!!!! The new director really cleaned things up. Kristin Stewart looked less like a druggie (even though she kinda still looked like one) and he cleaned up the acting, and, this has nothing to do with the director but, Taylor Lautner was shirtless like half the movie! Hello eight-pack. But what really made me mad was, Edward, who is supposed to be "perfectly sculpted" had fake muscles. He had them painted on. And over here is Jacob who gained almost 30lbs of muscle for this movie. Another thing that made me mad, at the premiere, here in Knoxville, Tenn... (where I'm from) Kristin Stewart looked gorgeous. The one place she can look like trash, she doesn't.

Seeing the movie at midnight was without a doubt worth feeling trashed the next day. An hour-and-a-half of sleep? That's a nap. Not sleep. Nap. Distinguished the difference? Not enough to function for a full day. I had a meltdown at the end of the day, I'll admit, but seeing the movie was well worth it. For those wondering, I'm on TEAM JACOB and proud of it. So tell me what you think. I'll be waiting!!

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Baa.... Oh! Excuse Me!

Well faithful readers, I try to give my latest posts at least a day or two to sink in, but this couldn't wait. Someone emailed this to a member of my family. I found it very amusing, and yet. I couldn't wait to share it with you. You should recognize the tune from a slightly older song. I hope you like it!!


Hopefully you all enjoyed it as much as I did. Comment!!
*Jewel*

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Pandora Radio

As you might have noticed, I have posted a "Share It" icon on the side. Dear readers, if you could please share this little blog, that would be wonderful. Just lovely, and for once, I'm not using that adjective sarcastically.

Today, since there isn't really anything in particular to write about, I'm gonna tell you about Pandora Radio. Pandora is this great site that makes internet music stations based on your type of music. All you have to do is enter a band or song in and it analyzes it and plays music like it. I've started listening to bands I thought I would never like because of it. You can also rate the music so if you don't like a song, just click the thumbs down and it will never play it on that station again. If you like it, click on the thumbs up and it will play it again. You can also set it so that if it plays a certain song too much it won't play it for a certain time period. And another thing: it's completely free, even if you want to join. Just follow this link:


So make a station and tell me what you think. I might even create a station just for Middle Earth and Such and send out the password (check the sidebar). That way everyone can hear everyone else's music. Hope it works!
*Jewel*

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Who ya gonna call?!?

Ghostbusters! Heh heh. Ok sorry. Well, my Algebra 1 teacher showed us this video and I decided to post it, even though most of you have probably seen it. I thoroughly enjoyed it, although I don't know how most of you might feel. I'm pretty sure it takes place in France so I'll throw this out there - Only in France. Here it is:

So, with that said, I have one more video. This cracks me up every time I see it. How can you not laugh? Ha. Ha ha. Ha ha ha.

Now that I have attempted to make you smile, I must leave. Comment!
*Jewel*

Monday, November 2, 2009

Another Post to Make Up For the Ones I Missed

Sorry about this, but I really didn't think of it until now. As you already know, Saturday was Halloween. So here is a column by Dave Barry:


Making fun of Halloween

BY DAVE BARRY

This classic Dave Barry column was originally published Oct. 27, 1996

I love Halloween. It reminds me of my happy childhood days as a student at Wampus Elementary School in Armonk, N.Y., when we youngsters used to celebrate Halloween by making decorations out of construction paper and that white paste that you could eat. This is also how we celebrated Columbus Day, Washington's Birthday, Lincoln's Birthday, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Easter, New Year's, Valentine's Day, Mother's Day, Father's Day, Armistice Day, Flag Day, Arbor Day, Thursday, etc. We brought these decorations home to our parents, who by federal law were required to attach them to the refrigerator with magnets.

That was a wonderful, carefree time in which to be a youngster or construction-paper salesperson. But it all ended suddenly one day -- I'll never forget it -- when the Soviet Union launched the first satellite, called ''Sputnik'' (which is Russian for ''Little Sput''). Immediately, all the grown-ups in America became hysterical about losing the Space Race, which led to a paranoid insecurity about our educational system, expressed in anguished newspaper headlines asking, ``WHY AREN'T OUR KIDS LEARNING IN SCHOOL?'' I wanted to answer, ''BECAUSE ALL WE EVER DO IS MAKE DECORATIONS OUT OF CONSTRUCTION PAPER,'' but I couldn't, because my mouth was full of paste.

But getting back to Halloween: It's still one of the most fun holidays of the year, as well as one of the most traditional, tracing its origins back more than 2,000 years to the Druids, an ancient religious cult that constructed Stonehenge as well as most of the public toilets in England. The Druids believed that one night each year, at the end of October, the souls of the dead returned to the world of the living and roamed from house to house costumed as Power Rangers.

And thus it is that to this day, youngsters come to our door on Halloween night shouting, ''Trick or treat!'' According to tradition, if we don't give the youngsters a treat, their parents will sue us. That's why most of us traditionally prepare for Halloween by going to the supermarket and purchasing approximately eight metric tons of miniature candy bars, which we dump into a big bowl by the door, ready to hand out to the hordes of trick-or-treaters.

The irony, of course, is that there are no hordes of trick-or-treaters, not anymore. We in the news media make darned sure of that. Every year we publish dozens of helpful consumer-advice articles, cheerfully reminding parents of the dangers posed by traffic, perverts, poisoned candy and many other Halloween hazards that parents would never think of if we didn't remind them (''Have fun, but remember that this year more than 17,000 Americans will die bobbing for apples'').

The result is that many children aren't allowed to go trick-or-treating, and the ones who are allowed out come to your house no later than 4:30 p.m., wearing reflective tape on their Power Rangers costumes and trailed at close range by their parents, who watch you suspiciously and regard whatever candy you hand out as though it were unsolicited mail from the Unabomber.

So for most of Halloween, your doorbell is quiet. This means that you pass the long night alone, hour after hour, just you and the miniature candy bars. After a while they start calling seductively to you from their bowl in their squeaky little voices.

''Hey, Big Boy!'' they call. ``We're going to waste over here!''

As the evening wears on they become increasingly brazen. Eventually they crawl across the floor, climb up your body, unwrap themselves and force themselves bodily into your mouth. There's no use hiding in the bathroom, because they'll just crawl under the door and tie you up with dental floss and threaten to squeeze toothpaste in your eye unless you eat them. At least that's what they do to me. By the end of the night, my blood has the same sugar content as Yoo-Hoo.

But eating huge amounts of candy allegedly purchased for youngsters is only part of the Halloween tradition. The other part is buying a pumpkin and carving it to make a ''jack-o'-lantern,'' which sits on your front porch, a festive symbol of the age-old truth -- first discovered by the Druids -- that there is no practical use for pumpkins.

Here's how to make a traditional jack-o'-lantern:

1. Cut a lid on top of the pumpkin.

2. Pull off the lid and peer down into the slimy, festering pumpkin bowels.

3. Put the lid back on and secure it with 200 feet of duct tape.

(This is also the traditional procedure for stuffing a turkey.)

But however you celebrate Halloween, make sure you remember this important safety tip: (IMPORTANT SAFETY TIP GOES HERE). Otherwise, you will not survive the night. I'd give you more details, but right now I need to do something about these tiny Milky Ways crawling up my legs.

Apologies

Hello my faithful readers who probably aren't so faithful anymore because I haven't updated in a long time! First, before anything, I would like to explain. My host site, www.blogger.com, was giving me problems on, yes, only my computer. It works on every other computer in the house, except mine. I didn't think to use a different computer until now. Whoops.

So, on that note, I will take a suggestion from a reader and blog about a movie today. Even though I already have (she said I haven't).

I will now tell you all about the WORST movie I have EVER seen. It's new. You may have heard of it. I'll give you a clue? Why the heck is the world so obsessed with vampires all of the sudden? No. It isn't Twilight. (Although, on a side note, New Moon, which I'm seeing at midnight by the way, looks like it's gonna be so much better than Twilight. I'm excited.) It's Cirque de Freak: The Vampires Assistant.

Let me tell you: the acting was so bad, it was distracting. And the actors were not cute by any stretch of the imagination, although some friends of mine might argue, so it wasn't any better. I mean, the good guy - mum ble er. And he didn't even try to act. It was awful - my new favorite adjective by the way - to the point where we were laughing at the scary parts. Bad guy, one word: overenthusiastic. He's supposed to be a high schooler but in my opinion, he looks like a fifth grader. And some might say, "But Vigo Mortensen (Aragorn in Lord of the Rings) mumbles and we forgive him!" My reply, "Of course we do! He plays those type of characters! His mumbling is GOOD!" In fact, he is the only good mumbler. But back on track. Wasn't a good movie in my opinion. Feel free to argue! You know I like comments!

Just to warn you, I will hopefully post an open session soon so you'll have to comment!! Mwuhahahah!!!!!! Leave comments!!

I'm also going to see about posting a chat thing so we can eliminate spam in the comment areas. If I can. To-do-loo!!

*Jewel*